“Channel receiving, princeps.” Hange’s moderati reported. The titan commander’s temples buzzed as information from the orbiting
Shepherd split and spread in fractal patterns. Wireframe topography overlaid her spatial awareness, pulsing with hot-spots. The
Shepherd was currently hanging in high orbit, where it could still easily burn away into deep space if the enemy ground batteries bared their teeth. As such the telemetry was not as precise as Hange would have liked - though it told her enough. The two hulking titan haulers that had landed under Lenz’ flag of truce were now retiring ponderously south towards the Patriot-held Verlin starport, carrying the enemy legion and its fallen Warhound with them. Unless they planned to redeploy right under the Sirenia’s guns, they were not going to interfere. The Delta Six hub and artillery bastion were a ruinous hell of firestorms and interference, while the salvage yard and supply dump were seething hives of enemy contacts.
Rosa’s hunting sensors provided keener definition to the latter. Having bought time to prepare with their compatriots’ blood, the Patriot second-line units had mobilised from the vulnerable supply dump, shaking off loaders and spitting out fuel lines to race forward and meet the coming attack. Hange saw the formations of sable-hulled Onagers unfolding for battle: a black rose with iron thorns, overlapping their refractor shields and fields of fire. The nearest were already stabbing erad beams in her direction, pricking
Rosa and
Aeterna’s shields with angry fireballs. The flashing lights of the Onagers competed with the fiery glow of Delta Six, a hell-red artificial sunset backlighting
Sicut Sanguis Rosa as it stalked through the gathering dusk.
“Heretek machines approaching, princeps Zoerrin.” Phenro voxed out to Hange, amusement filtering through his deadpan delivery. “We are targeting the supply dump.”
Aeterna bulldozed forward with its awkward, lumbering stride, washed in flames and impacts as it drew fire for the smaller Knights screening it. The hydraulics of its quake cannon snarled angrily as they elevated the gun into firing position.
“New contact.” Phenro’s sensori officer warned, torquing a dial on his periscope handle. “Sector zero seven gamma."
Phenro’s head automatically switched to the right as he focused on the auspex inputs from
Aeterna’s starboard quarter. “Too fast for ground units.” he cursed inwardly. “Get me a lock for the Anvilus cannons!”
“Identifying.” the sensori officer acknowledged. “Four flyers, peeling away!”
“Peeling aw-” Phenro realised that there was no time to complete the thought. “Brace for impact!”
The enemy squadron had been flying low, weaving through the scarred terrain only to rise and release a swarm of comet-tailed missiles as they banked away. The automated quad-guns in
Aeterna’s shoulder batteries sparked defiance, and two of the incoming metal darts tumbled and exploded. The others shrieked on, three striking
Aeterna, and three hitting
Rosa. Boiling, billowing hurricanes of fire rolled off both titans, rocking the smaller Knights attending them.
Both engines’ shields collapsed with a heavy
whoompf, vibrating the ground and chasing circular ripples of dust out across the landscape.
Aeterna reeled like a drunken giant, and Phenro had to seize direct control of the left leg, planting it down hard to arrest the titan’s dangerous sideways skid.
“What in the Deus’ name was that?” the tech-priestess down below voxed angrily.
"Just a few flies, magos.” Phenro replied, gritting his teeth against the angry barks of pain feeding back to him through the Warbringer’s spirit link. “You should have seen them at Alpha One! Their bloody air support used to come over the same time every day, you could set your wrist-chron by them! The locals called them the traffic police because they could clear all the jams on the roads like no-one else.” He shook his head, fighting
Aeterna’s urge to spray shells into the sky in futile pursuit of the vanished enemy fighters. “Damage report!"
“Shield generator is non-responsive.” the priestess responded. “Mauler turret 1 is destroyed, and I’ve lost fire control to 2.”
“This fight just got interesting, princeps Zoerrin!” Phenro transmitted to the staggering
Rosa. Static arcs were leaping across the Reaver’s hull, soon joined by explosive blasts of yellow light as the enemy Onagers resumed their fire.
“Sector two five alpha.” the sensori officer warned.
From behind a gouged ridge topped with the smoking ruin of an Aegis wall, a snub-nosed gunship came hacking up. Five hundred metres to the right a second appeared, dipping its tilt-rotor wings. Both were wreathed in smoke as they sent a volley of rockets hurtling towards the engaged titans.
“Back half stride!” Phenro ordered, wrenching
Aeterna’s torso around to present its heavy frontal armour at the expense of pulling its charging quake cannon off target.
“Contacts, contacts, contacts!” the sensori shouted.
The squadron of enemy gunships engaged, one after the other. They rose and then hooked away, a constant, whizzing stream of missiles thumping from their launchers. Missile after missile, burning darts against the dusk.
Aeterna spat back ineffectually with its one remaining Mauler cannon.
“Knight commander Straub, I’m going to have to trouble you for a little protective fire!” Phenro sent, before switching to
Aeterna’s internal vox with a mental nudge. “Give me full power for the Reaver cannons, magos!”
Down in the furnace-hot reactor chamber, Phenro’s faithful enginseer shielded her head as a chain of bolts blew out of their housings overhead and began to vomit greasy weapons coolant down onto the grated deck.
“Oh Omnissiah!” she wailed, scrambling for the isolator valves. “Princeps! She’s bleeding!”
“Don’t worry, magos.” Phenro hissed, feeling the rupture as a persistent jag in the crook of his right elbow. “She’s not leaking oil, she’s just sweating power!
Cannons, now!”
+ + + + + +
Sinae dragged its foot forward across the earth, ploughing away the men below it with one contemptuous kick. The roads had been torn apart by tank-treads and shellfire, and now the two Warhounds were slashing them into further ruin with their mighty footsteps. Their ammunition and power cells were already running low from sheer target saturation.
Plasma bolts hissed back and forth, trailing streamers of blue fire as heavy kataphrons on the ground shot back at the titans.
Maria’s much larger blastguns returned their fury with incinerating fireballs, within which men turned to dark shadows and then to plumes of ash in the space of an eyeblink. A few Onagers appeared, clanking, smoke-dark and vengeful, but not enough to give the Warhounds pause as they advanced.
Sinae and
Maria bolted over trench lines, strafed around hardpoints, and unleashed hell on the prefab field camp.
Abattoir workshops where damaged skitarii hung twitching under sparking welder arms went up in flames, taking the wounded and their mindless repair servitors with them. Buildings, bunkers and watchtowers all went up, picked off methodically by the circling titans. Infantry boiled from the underground bunker network like ants from a kicked nest.
It was easy to tell the menial forge-guard apart from the skitarii. The forge-guard dug like grubs into the deepest trenches they could find, dragging wounded comrades after them. The skitarii stood or knelt behind burning barricades, calmly snapping harmless radium rounds into the Warhounds’ shields. When they ran out of ammunition, they stood defiant and hurled binary curses instead. It was not in their stimm-saturated minds to surrender, not so long as the visions of the tech-priest prophets beamed into their minds ordered them to fight.
Princeps Rosen, whose titan’s shields had already taken a battering, turned her attention sharply down as a new series of impacts screamed around
Sinae’s feet. Through the hull cameras she saw enemy skitarii - unarmed, some of them missing cybernetic limbs which the workshops had not yet replaced - running headlong at her titan’s feet only to vanish in pink clouds as they struck the voids. Off to Historia’s left, Krista and
Maria were trying to backstride away from the same suicidal attack.
Sinae pulsed an angry hiss through Historia’s head as the shields faltered.
“Grappling lines!” the steersman warned, unnecessarily. Historia could also feel the stigmatic impacts needling her shins like wasp stings.
Down on the toxic, smoke-choked ground, skitarii with mag-lures and grapnel guns had scrambled their way through the trenches to the front. They raised their weapon arms and shot out spiralling black ropes that hooked and clamped against the Warhound’s leg armour. Sicarian units barged their way forwards, long-limbed and ghoulish, cackling with static and resonant sonics as they skittered up the ropes.
The titan heeled round, snapping boarding lines and dragging the unlucky skitarii who remained attached across the ground. But the Ruststalkers and their screeching Infiltrator brethren clung on like spiders. They leapt onto
Sinae’s hull and set to work with powered blades and transonic claws, searching for access hatches.
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